The information in this article applies to:
SUMMARY
In Microsoft Windows NT, using the MS-DOS FDISK /MBR command is not
always appropriate when you cannot boot a computer. The problem is that
the command rewrites the master boot record (MBR) only, and not the
entire boot record. The FDISK /MBR command rewrites only the first 446
bytes of the master boot record, not the partition table. Windows NT
disk signatures used for fault tolerance are also overwritten, and if
the drive contained an FT member, it may not be recognized by Windows NT
as an FT member afterward.
MORE INFORMATION
If you receive any of the following messages on a blue screen when you
are booting Windows NT, you need to check for a virus:
When these symptoms occur, the first step is to run a virus scan. F-Prot, Norton, McAfee, and Dr. Soloman are programs that are commonly used and all have shareware downloads on the Internet. If one of these does not indicate a virus, try one of the others. Other symptoms can include the following:
Another option for protecting yourself is to boot from an MS-DOS disk and run Norton DiskEdit to view the partition table entries. The entries displayed are those from the indexed location from the active virus. Record the values that are displayed. If, after inoculation, the partition table entries are destroyed, you can manually type the recorded values and restore the partition table values to valid entries (but without the virus). For additional information, please see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base: ARTICLE-ID: Q69013 Additional query words: 6.22 5.00 5.00a
Keywords : kb3rdparty kbother ntfilesys |
Last Reviewed: November 23, 1999 © 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |